"Anne Boyer’s radically unsentimental account of cancer and the 'carcinogenosphere' obliterates cliche. By demonstrating how her utterly specific experience is also irreducibly social, she opens up new spaces for thinking and feeling together. The Undying is an outraged, beautiful, and brilliant work of embodied critique." ―Ben Lerner, author of The Topeka School
"The pink ribbon, that ubiquitous emblem of breast cancer awareness, has long been an object of controversy and derision, but the poet and essayist Anne Boyer doesn’t just pull it loose, unfastening its dainty loop; she feeds it through a shredder and lights it on fire, incinerating its remains . . . [in her] extraordinary and furious new book." ―Jennifer Szalai, The New York Times
"[A] rousing hybrid of memoir and manifesto . . . [The Undying] is memoir as anti-capitalist indictment, as biting cultural criticism, as vengeance. It suggests a new era in the politics of breast cancer, one that might look less like corporate sponsored marathons every October and more like the radical, confrontational AIDS activism of the 1980s. Arriving the year before an election that could set healthcare and disability policy for decades, The Undying warns us of the human costs of any system that prioritizes profit over lives." ―Sascha Cohen, NPR
"Boyer returns with a beautiful memoir about her battle with breast cancer . . . [The Undying] puts into sharp focus the economic toll cancer takes on women of limited means . . . and is stacked with revelatory observations . . . Boyer’s gorgeous language elevates this artful, piercing narrative well above the average medical memoir." ―Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Anne Boyer is a poet and essayist. She was the inaugural winner of the 2018 Cy Twombly Award for Poetry from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts and winner of the 2018 Whiting Award in nonfiction/poetry. Her books include A Handbook of Disappointed Fate as well as several books of poetry, including the 2016 CLMP Firecracker Award–winning Garments Against Women. She was born and raised in Kansas, and was educated in its public schools and libraries. Since 2011, Boyer has been a professor at the Kansas City Art Institute. She lives in Kansas City, Missouri.
评分
评分
评分
评分
这本书给我的冲击,是一种缓慢而深刻的侵蚀,并非那种瞬间炸裂的震撼,而是像潮水般,一点点地漫过你的意识,最终将你淹没。作者对人性的挖掘,触及到了许多黑暗而令人不安的角落,那些被压抑的欲望、被遗忘的痛苦、以及在极端环境下扭曲的灵魂,都被赤裸裸地呈现在读者面前。我在这本书里,看到了许多熟悉又陌生的情感,它们交织缠绕,构成了一幅复杂而令人心悸的画卷。有时候,我会因为书中的某些描绘而感到窒息,仿佛那些黑暗的情绪也渗透到了我的现实生活中,让我无法轻易摆脱。
评分我不得不承认,这本书的气质非常独特,它不像那些直白铺陈故事的书籍,而是更像一幅抽象画,需要读者自己去填补那些留白的想象空间,去解读那些符号化的象征意义。作者似乎有意为之,将一些关键的情节处理得极为模糊,如同雾气笼罩下的远山,朦胧却又充满吸引力。我常常在阅读的过程中,停下来反复咀嚼某个段落,试图捕捉那种潜藏在文字之下的更深层的含义。这种阅读体验,与其说是享受,不如说是一种挑战,是对自身解读能力和想象力的极致考验。它要求你不仅仅是被动地接受,更是主动地参与到故事的构建中去,成为故事的一部分,去感受那份沉甸甸的、无法言说的重量。
评分这本书给我带来的感觉,就像是在无边黑暗中偶然拾起的一颗奇异宝石,它散发着一种幽深而诱人的光芒,却又让你无法完全窥探其全貌。作者的笔触,一开始便带着一种古老而压抑的氛围,仿佛沉寂了千年的遗迹正在缓慢苏醒,每一个字句都像是埋藏在土壤下的秘密,需要耐心去挖掘,去感受那股涌动着的、隐匿的力量。我在这本书里,看到的不仅仅是情节的推进,更像是置身于一个精心构建的迷宫,每一条岔路都通往未知的深渊,同时又可能隐藏着通往核心的线索。我曾一度怀疑我是否能找到走出迷宫的路,又或者,根本就没有所谓的“走出”,只有更深的沉沦。
评分我完全可以想象,这本书会成为许多读者心中的“怪胎”,它不会轻易被归类,也不会符合大众的期待。它的节奏是缓慢的,它的叙事是碎片化的,它的主题是沉重的。然而,正是这种“不讨喜”的特质,反而成就了它独特的光辉。我在这本书里,感受到了作者对某种宏大概念的执着追求,一种对存在、对意义、对时间的深刻叩问。我甚至开始思考,自己在这本书所构建的世界里,究竟扮演着怎样的角色,又或者,我是否已经成为了这本书的一部分,无法再抽离。
评分这是一本需要静下心来,并且愿意投入大量精力的书。它的语言风格,我很难用简单的词语来形容,既有诗意的优雅,又有哲学式的深邃,同时还夹杂着一种原始的、野性的力量。我曾经为了理解其中一个隐喻,查阅了好几本书籍,试图找到与之呼应的线索。作者似乎总能在不经意间抛出一个让你思考许久的问题,让你不断地审视自己,审视这个世界。我并不认为这是一本轻松愉快的读物,但它绝对是一本能够触及灵魂、引发深思的书。它像一门古老的咒语,在你阅读时,缓慢地在你脑海中回响,久久不散。
评分如果在我家中那位癌症患者还在的时候,我就看过了这本书该多好。也许不能完全理解,但至少也能知道原来她的心里是这样的痛苦,这样的害怕……也许我可以做得更好……太难过了……
评分3.5星?非常个人化的书写,比起硬社科,更像散文诗集,很美。你不能阻止他人以疾病为隐喻,剖析自己体验到的绝望。所以也不能逼迫本就没有共情心的人,向绝望伸出手。再直接一点,有人还可能会被它“激怒”——这也许就是敏感和情感的力量。
评分再一次被普利策奖欺骗????????????普利策,你发挥能不能正常一些
评分今年普利策非虚构获奖作品,偏散文,读不太下去。
评分再一次被普利策奖欺骗????????????普利策,你发挥能不能正常一些
本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 book.quotespace.org All Rights Reserved. 小美书屋 版权所有